Turkey blocks calls for regime change in Iran as protests escalate
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Turkey is opposing calls for regime change in Iran as security forces carry out a deadly crackdown on nationwide protests. The Turkish government accuses Israel of exploiting the unrest, and is leading efforts to block any military action against Iran – warning that a collapse of the regime could destabilise the region.
Since protests began across Iran almost three weeks ago, Turkey has tried to play down the scale of the unrest. It has distanced itself from Western allies calling for regime change and avoided offering explicit support for those demands.
The protests began on 28 December after a currency collapse triggered demonstrations by merchants and traders in Tehran. The unrest quickly spread nationwide. Activists say more than 2,000 protesters have been killed.
Alongside Saudi Arabia, Oman and Qatar, Turkey has lobbied Washington against any military response to the killings. Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said such a move would worsen the situation.
“We oppose military intervention against Iran; Iran must resolve its own problems,” Fidan said. “We want the issue resolved through dialogue.”
France summons Iran envoy over ‘unrestrained’ protest crackdown
Fear of regional collapse
According to The Guardian newspaper, US President Donald Trump’s decision to step back from attacking Iran was influenced by Turkey and its Arab allies – who warned of regional chaos if an attack went ahead.
Turkey fears that Iran could descend into civil war similar to Iraq after the collapse of its regime, said Serhan Afacan, head of the Ankara-based Center for Iranian Studies, adding the consequences would be more severe due to Iran’s size and diversity.
“Iran has a population of about 90 million, including many ethnic minorities such as Turks, Kurds, Arabs and Baluchis,” Afacan explained.
“If a conflict erupts among these groups, it could result in a prolonged civil war. Any resulting immigration from Iran to Turkey could reach millions.”
Turkey and Iran unite against Israel as regional power dynamics shift
PKK security fears
Turkey already hosts about three million refugees. Experts say Ankara’s biggest security concern is the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, which has fought Turkey for an independent Kurdish state and has an Iranian affiliate, PJAK.
Although the PKK announced a ceasefire last year and pledged to disband, Ankara fears unrest in Iran could give the group new opportunities, said Iranian expert Bilgehan Alagoz, of Marmara University.
“Day by day, we have started to see the PKK groups in certain cities of Iran demanding some separatist demands, and this is the main concern for Turkey,” he said.
Ankara also accuses Israel of exploiting the situation in Iran.
“Israel has targeted all these PKK groups and tried to motivate the PKK groups inside Iran,” Alagoz said. “Any instability inside Iran can create a space for the PKK.”
Fidan has also accused Israel of manipulating the protests.
Turkey is already confronting another PKK-linked group in Syria, the Syrian Democratic Forces, which controls large parts of the country. Ankara accuses Israel of supporting the SDF, adding Iran to a broader Israeli-Turkish regional rivalry.
France’s Iranian diaspora divided over deadly protests back home
Energy pressure
Turkey could also clash with Washington over Iran if the protests continue. Trump has warned that countries trading with Tehran could face 25 percent tariffs.
Iran supplies Turkey with about one-fifth of its gas needs, according to Atilla Yesilada, an analyst at the Global Source Partners think tank. “Iran pumps 10 billion cubic metres of gas to Turkey every year, roughly one-fifth of total consumption,” he said.
That supply could theoretically be replaced by liquefied natural gas imports, but Yesilada warned that Turkey is already struggling to cut its dependence on Russia, its main energy supplier.
“Combine this with increasing American and EU pressure to cut gas purchases from Russia, and Turkey is in a very difficult situation,” he said.
ENVIRONMENT
Stronger protection for marine life as landmark law takes hold on high seas
For decades, vast stretches of ocean beyond national borders have been governed by patchwork rules and weak oversight. On Saturday, that changes. The High Seas Treaty enters into force, creating the first legally binding global framework to protect marine life in international waters that span nearly half the planet.
Known as the Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ) Agreement, the treaty gives countries a shared legal toolbox to conserve and manage the parts of the ocean that belong to nobody.
After almost 20 years of marathon negotiations, the United Nations adopted it in June 2023. In September, Morocco became the 60th country to ratify the treaty, triggering the countdown to it becoming law. More countries have joined since.
Conservation groups say its long-awaited rollout marks a shift from ambition to obligation.
Nations that have ratified the agreement must begin applying a set of legal duties to protect marine life – even as key institutions are still being built.
Once thought to be lifeless, the high seas are now known to host extraordinary biodiversity, from deep-sea corals to migratory species that travel vast distances across the ocean.
They also play a critical role in regulating Earth’s climate. The ocean absorbs around 30 percent of carbon dioxide emissions and more than 80 percent of the excess heat they generate, helping to slow the pace of global warming.
But scientists warn that this vast ecosystem is under growing pressure from human activity – including fishing, pollution and climate change – that often happens far from public view.
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An ocean beyond borders
The high seas are the open ocean and deep seabed beyond countries’ exclusive economic zones. They make up about two-thirds of the ocean and nearly half of Earth’s surface.
Despite this extraordinary scale, less than 1 percent of the high seas is currently protected.
One of the treaty’s most anticipated outcomes is the creation of marine protected areas, where human activities would be limited or banned to allow ecosystems to recover.
The treaty sets out a formal process for proposing and adopting these areas, including scientific review and consultation. While final decisions will be taken by the Conference of the Parties, or BBNJ Cop – due to be held within the treaty’s first year – countries can already begin preparing proposals.
The High Seas Alliance, a coalition of conservation organisations, has identified several places that could form a first generation of protected areas. They include the Emperor Seamounts, a chain of underwater mountains in the Pacific; the Sargasso Sea, a biologically rich area of the Atlantic; and the Salas y Gomez and Nazca ridges, a vast seafloor region off South America.
“For the first time, the global community has a legal mechanism to protect the parts of the ocean that belong to no one state,” said Kevin Chand, director of Pacific ocean policy at Pristine Seas, an ocean conservation programme of the National Geographic Society.
Chand also pointed to the role of Pacific countries in pushing negotiations over the line, saying their “bold leadership” helped turn a vision into law.
Indigenous knowledge steers new protections for the high seas
New obligations
While some of the treaty’s bodies are still under construction, a range of obligations apply immediately. Countries that have ratified must promote the treaty’s conservation goals when they take part in decisions at other international ocean bodies – including fisheries, shipping and seabed authorities.
They must also begin cooperating on marine scientific research, technology transfer and capacity building, particularly with developing countries.
Planned activities under a country’s control that could harm marine life in international waters must now undergo environmental impact assessments that meet the treaty’s standards.
The agreement also introduces new reporting and transparency rules around marine genetic resources – genes from plants, animals and microbes that could be used in research or commercial products such as medicines.
Countries must start signalling the collection and use of these resources and sharing non-monetary benefits such as data and access to samples.
Niue, the tiny island selling the sea to save it from destruction
A global test of follow-through
Enric Sala, founder of Pristine Seas and a National Geographic explorer, warns that protection on paper will not be enough.
“New marine protected areas – whether they are established in the high seas or near shore – will only be effective if they are strictly protected and fully monitored for illegal activity,” he said.
“This is the only way we can ensure that marine reserves deliver benefits to climate, biodiversity and economies.”
The treaty does not automatically protect any part of the ocean – nor does it override existing bodies that regulate fishing, shipping or seabed mining. Instead, it relies on countries to align their decisions with the new conservation framework.
Supporters say this means that political will, funding and widespread participation will be critical. Only countries that ratify the treaty are legally bound by its rules, but wider uptake will be needed if it is to work as intended.
For now, Saturday marks the start of a new phase. After years of negotiation, scientists say the challenge now centres on cooperation and whether countries will actually use the tools they have given themselves.
EU – South America
South American Mercosur bloc to ink long-awaited trade deal with EU
Asuncion (Paraguay) (AFP) – The South American trade bloc Mercosur and the European Union will sign on Saturday a deal 25 years in the making to create one of the world’s largest free trade areas at a time of growing protectionism and volatility.
The long-awaited agreement comes amid the sweeping use of tariffs and trade threats by US President Donald Trump‘s administration, which has sent countries scrambling for new partnerships.
Together, the EU and Mercosur account for 30 percent of global GDP and more than 700 million consumers.
The treaty eliminates tariffs on more than 90 percent of bilateral trade.
The deal will favour European exports of cars, wine and cheese, while making it easier for South American beef, poultry, sugar, rice, honey and soybeans to enter Europe.
The treaty between the EU and Mercosur nations Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay was agreed in Brussels last week despite fierce opposition from European farmers.
They fear the deal will lead to an influx of cheaper South American products due to production standards they consider less stringent.
Some in South America are also wary about the impact of the treaty.
In Argentina, it is estimated that there could be a loss of 200,000 jobs just from the dismantling of the local automotive industry, trade and investment researcher Luciana Ghiotto told AFP.
Is France misguided to keep rejecting the EU-Mercosur trade deal?
‘A powerful message’
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council head Antonio Costa and EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic will attend the signing ceremony in Asuncion.
Paraguay’s President Santiago Pena and Uruguay’s Yamandu Orsi will also be present. The attendance of Argentina’s leader Javier Milei is not confirmed.
Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who played a key role in driving negotiations forward, will not attend.
His office said the signing had initially been planned as a ministerial-level event, and Paraguay issued “last-minute” invites to presidents.
Von der Leyen stopped in Rio de Janeiro on Friday to meet with Lula on the way to Asuncion.
She praised Lula’s role in pushing forward the negotiations, and said the deal “sends a powerful message” and shows “the power of partnership and openness. And this is how we create real prosperity”.
Lula said the agreement was “very good, especially for the democratic world and for multilateralism”.
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The treaty is among several that countries are rushing to close in an uncertain global environment shaped by Trump’s tariff threats and protectionism.
On Friday, Trump threatened to slap trade tariffs on countries that do not support his plans to take over Greenland, a territory of NATO ally Denmark.
Lula added that the partnership with the EU went “beyond the economic dimension.”
“The European Union and Mercosur share values such as respect for democracy, the rule of law, and human rights,” he said.
The signing of the deal comes as Latin America is still reeling from Trump’s ouster and capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro in a dramatic military operation this month.
(AFP)
France
French dictionary that dubbed 7 October victims ‘Jewish settlers’ recalled
French publisher Hachette has recalled a middle-school dictionary that described the Israeli victims of the 7 October 2023 attacks as “Jewish settlers” after an antisemitism watchdog raised concerns, promising to review all its textbooks and educational materials.
The Larousse dictionary for 11- to 15-year-old students is the latest publication to come under scrutiny after an anti-racism group flagged other Hachette schoolbooks for similar references earlier this week.
The dictionary was found to contain the same phrase as three revision manuals for high schoolers that have already been recalled, the company told French news agency AFP on Friday.
In French, the entry reads: “In October 2023, following the death of more than 1,200 Jewish settlers in a series of Hamas attacks, Israel decided to tighten its economic blockade and invade a large part of the Gaza Strip, triggering a major humanitarian crisis in the region.”
The worst attack in Israeli history saw militants from the Palestinian Islamist group kill around 1,200 people in settlements close to the Gaza Strip and at a music festival.
“Jewish settlers” is a term used to describe Israelis living on illegally occupied Palestinian land.
Antisemitism in France ‘quadrupled’ on back of Israel-Hamas war
‘Revisionism’
Licra, the International League against Racism and Antisemitism, drew attention to the wording in a post on X on Wednesday, calling it “confusing and negationist”.
President Emmanuel Macron joined the condemnation, saying it was “intolerable” that the revision books for the baccalaureat – the French school leavers’ exam – “falsify the facts” about the “terrorist and antisemitic attacks by Hamas”.
“Revisionism has no place in the Republic,” he wrote on X.
Education Minister Edouard Geffray also denounced what he described as “a distortion of the facts and an affront to the dignity of victims of terrorism”, saying schoolbooks should be free of bias.
‘Preserve our freedom’: Macron defends France’s 1905 secularism law
Hachette apologised for the “incorrect content”. The books concerned were immediately withdrawn from sale and will be destroyed, the publisher said, promising a “thorough review of its textbooks, educational materials and dictionaries”.
In a statement, the company said it had begun an internal inquiry “to determine how such an error was made”. It promised to put in place “a new, strengthened verification process for all its future publications” in these series.
Hachette, France’s leading publishing group, came under the control of ultra-conservative Catholic billionaire Vincent Bolloré at the end of 2023. The tycoon also owns several French broadcasters, newspapers and magazines, and has been accused of using his media empire to advance the far right.
(with newswires)
ANALYSIS
How much is China willing to risk to protect its ties with Iran?
China is weighing how far it is willing to go to protect its economic relationship with Iran as the United States threatens new tariffs on countries that defy Washington’s line on Tehran.
As protests and repression intensify inside Iran, Beijing finds itself under growing pressure. China’s long-standing principle of non-interference is colliding with its deep economic entanglement with the Islamic Republic.
When US President Donald Trump warned that Tehran would face “serious consequences” if protesters were killed, China initially stayed silent. When it did respond, it repeated familiar positions, calling for calm, opposing outside interference and restating views it said it had “always” held.
That posture shifted on Tuesday, when Trump announced an additional 25 percent tariff on countries that continue to defy Washington’s policy on Iran. The measure was to take effect “definitively” and “immediately”, and was aimed above all at China, Iran’s most important trading partner.
Beijing said it would “resolutely defend its legitimate rights and interests”, reject foreign military intervention in Iran and act as needed to protect Chinese citizens.
New protests hit Iran as alarm grows over crackdown ‘massacre’
Trade and oil ties
China is central to Iran’s economy. More than a quarter of Iran’s total trade in 2024 was conducted with China, according to the World Trade Organization.
Iran imported around $18 billion worth of goods from China and exported about $14.5 billion in return, figures that underline the scale of the partnership.
Chinese energy companies, including Sinopec, are directly involved in offshore oil extraction in Iranian waters. China was still importing an estimated 1.8 million barrels of Iranian oil per day last autumn.
“These oil flows fluctuate depending on the month,” said Théo Nencini, a researcher specialising in Sino-Iranian relations at the Catholic Institute of Paris and Sciences Po Grenoble.
“They increase with the Chinese New Year. In general, between December and January – not always – the Chinese import a little less, then imports rise just after.”
Nencini said a key shift came in March 2023, when Iran and Saudi Arabia restored diplomatic relations in Beijing.
“From that moment on, we saw a fairly dizzying increase in Iranian oil exports to China,” he said. Until 2022, exports averaged around 700,000 to 800,000 barrels per day. “Then it rose to around 1.5 million in 2025.”
UN sanctions on Iran set to return as nuclear diplomacy fades
Why China can absorb Iranian oil
Estimates suggesting that more than 90 percent of Iranian oil exports go to China are plausible, said Didier Chaudet, an expert in geopolitics, specialising in Persian-speaking regions.
“If we look at Iran’s other potential customers, we see countries that do not have the means for abundant consumption, such as Afghanistan at present, or Syria until the fall of the Assad regime,” Chaudet said.
Others, such as Turkey, “do not have the political will, for fear of provoking American wrath”.
That leaves China as “the only country with the political will, economic need and financial capacity to absorb the majority of Iranian oil”, Chaudet added.
Around a quarter of that oil is processed in so-called teapot refineries, small semi-independent facilities known for handling sanctioned crude from Iran or Venezuela.
China is increasingly assuming responsibility for this trade through forums such as BRICS+ and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, both of which Iran has joined, Chaudet said.
“It is a way to criticise the latest sanctions imposed on Iran, which are considered excessive and even illegal,” he said.
Buying Iranian oil beyond China’s immediate needs is also “a way of helping the regime to stabilise”, Chaudet said. Many Chinese researchers fear that if the regime collapses, Iran could become “a greater Syria rather than a greater Sweden”.
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A relationship centuries in the making
China’s engagement with Iran predates recent crises. Beijing supported the 2015 nuclear deal, which Trump later abandoned during his first term.
In 2021, after Joe Biden entered the White House, China and Iran announced a 25-year cooperation agreement promising up to $400 billion in Chinese investment, although the extent of its implementation remains unclear.
For Emmanuel Lincot, professor at the Catholic Institute of Paris and research director at IRIS, the agreement was “unprecedented in the history of bilateral relations”.
He said it was accompanied by military cooperation, most recently joint Chinese, Iranian and Russian naval manoeuvres off South Africa.
The relationship stretches back centuries.
Lincot pointed to the 7th-century Sassanid ruler Péroz, a Persian king, who sought refuge at the Chinese imperial court in Xi’an after Arab-Muslim invasions, a story “regularly repeated by both propaganda machines” as evidence of ancient ties.
In the early 15th century, Chinese admiral Zheng He sailed as far as the Strait of Hormuz during his maritime expeditions.
Iran is now a key link in Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road strategy, connecting Central Asia to the Arabian Gulf. China has also acted as a broker between Iran and Saudi Arabia when strategic, particularly energy, interests align.
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Support, but with limits
Beijing’s support for Tehran is not unconditional. Chaudet said Iranian perceptions of Russia and China are increasingly diverging.
“Moscow has not lived up to the expected level of support,” he said, despite Tehran’s alignment with the Kremlin over Ukraine.
China, however, “is not in a position of absolute support”, Chaudet said. Chinese analysts are aware of the Iranian regime’s weaknesses and are “not receptive” to Tehran’s calls for greater assistance.
“Iran is a partner, certainly, but not at the heart of China’s national interests,” he said. “China will not go into conflict with Washington to save Tehran.”
What remains central for Beijing is keeping oil flowing through the Strait of Hormuz.
“The Chinese are waiting,” Nencini said. “They are waiting to see how everyone reacts.”
Whether Washington’s threat of secondary tariffs will divert China from Iranian oil remains uncertain, particularly given the fragile trade truce between the two countries.
Much now depends on Trump’s next move. He has said his only limit is his own “moral compass”, alongside domestic political pressure and looming mid-term elections.
This has been adapted from the original article in French by RFI’s Igor Gauquelin.
FRANCE – JUSTICE
French prosecutor seeks jail term for Iranian woman accused of terrorism
A French prosecutor has called for a four-year prison sentence, with three years suspended, for an Iranian woman accused of promoting “terrorism” online. The case is linked to a possible prisoner swap involving French citizens Cécile Kohler and Jacques Paris, who were released from jail in Tehran but have not yet been allowed to leave Iran.
Mahdieh Esfandiari, 39, was arrested in France in February on charges of promoting and inciting “tterrorism” on social media. The offences carry a maximum sentence of seven years in prison and a fine of up to €100,000.
She’s accused of writing posts for a channel called “Axis of the Resistance” in 2023 and 2024 on platforms including Telegram, X, Twitch and YouTube.
In particular, the organisation’s Telegram account glorified the deadly attack carried out by the Palestinian militant group Hamas on 7 October 2023 in Israel, incited terrorist acts and insulted the Jewish community.
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Court proceedings
Esfandiari was held in pre-trial detention for around eight months before being released in October ahead of her trial. The hearing began on Tuesday and had been scheduled long before protests erupted in Iran.
The prosecutor asked the court to impose a four-year jail term, including three years suspended, but said it would not be necessary for Esfandiari to return to prison.
Esfandiari, who has translated into French works from a publisher linked to Iranian authorities, told the court she had taken part in the “Axis of the Resistance” project but did not write the posts attributed to her.
She said the Hamas attacks in 2023 should not be considered “terrorism”.
“It’s not an act of terrorism, it’s an act of resistance,” she said.
The court is expected to deliver its verdict at a later date.
‘Hostage diplomacy’: longstanding Iran tactic presenting dilemma for West
French pair waiting to return
Kohler and Paris were arrested in Iran in May 2022 and held for more than three years on espionage charges that their families strongly denied. They were released in November.
After their release, French diplomats took them to France’s mission in Tehran, where they remain while awaiting permission to leave the country.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in November that Tehran would allow the pair to return to France in “exchange” for Esfandiari’s release.
France has neither confirmed nor denied that any such deal exists.
But it has reduced staffing levels at its embassy in Tehran following nationwide protests that erupted last week. The unrest is seen as one of the biggest challenges to Iran’s clerical leadership since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
Iran’s ambassador to France, Mohammad Amin Nejad, said late Thursday that he hoped Kohler and Paris would soon be able to return home.
“My wish is for their return as soon as possible after arrangements have been made between the two states,” he said.
(with newswires)
GEOPOLITICS
South Africa to probe Iran’s role in war games that angered US
Johannesburg (AFP) – South Africa’s defence minister has ordered an inquiry into reports of Iran’s participation in navy exercises, apparently against the instructions of the president, the ministry said Friday.
The probe comes after the United States sharply criticised the past week’s drills, which brought vessels from China, Iran, Russia and the United Arab Emirates to waters off Cape Town.
Local media reported President Cyril Ramaphosa had instructed the defence minister to withdraw the three Iranian warships from the drills, which came amid the Iranian government’s deadly crackdown on protesters.
It was unclear to what extent Iran took part, but images emerged of at least one Iranian vessel at sea.
A defence ministry statement on social media on Tuesday listed an Iranian corvette as among the participants, but the post was later removed.
Defence Minister Angie Motshekga had “clearly communicated” the president’s instruction, the defence ministry said in a statement that did not make clear the president’s order, which was also not confirmed by his office.
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A board of inquiry would investigate “whether the instruction of the president may have been misrepresented and/or ignored”, it said.
The defence force said the China-led exercises of nations in the BRICS alliance were to “ensure the safety of shipping lanes and maritime economic activities”.
The US embassy on Thursday criticised Iran’s presence as “particularly unconscionable” given the protest crackdown, which independent monitors say left thousands dead.
The exercises involved nations with major diplomatic differences with the United States, at a time when Pretoria is seeking to improve its battered ties with Washington.
US President Donald Trump‘s administration has accused South Africa of anti-American policies and boycotted a G20 summit it hosted in November, also imposing 30-percent trade tariffs.
In August, Ramaphosa’s office rebuked the defence force for allowing the country’s top general to visit Iran, where he reportedly called for cooperation in defence matters.
The visit was unhelpful as South Africa managed “a very delicate exercise of resetting diplomatic relations with the United States”, a spokesman said.
AFRICA – RUSSIA
Ukraine war videos raise questions over Russia’s recruitment of Africans
Videos shared on Ukrainian social media since the weekend claim to show African nationals fighting in the ranks of the Russian army – raising fresh questions about Moscow’s overseas recruitment practices.
The footage, widely circulated online, shows black men in Russian military uniforms being humiliated, threatened or described as expendable. The language used has drawn attention to the risks faced by foreign recruits sent to the front line.
The videos have not been formally authenticated. But experts interviewed by RFI said the footage appears credible.
They added that the images match earlier investigations and expert reports suggesting African nationals – often misled during recruitment – have been deployed to some of the most dangerous areas of the battlefield.
‘We come here to die’: African recruits sent to fight Russia’s war in Ukraine
‘Disposable’ troops
One video shows a visibly frightened man who identifies himself as Francis. An anti-tank mine appears to be strapped to his chest. The person filming insults him, threatens him and orders him to run forward, seemingly to draw enemy fire.
A second clip, filmed in a snowy forest, shows a group of men singing a Ugandan military song. The cameraman refers to them as “disposable”.
These scenes echo findings by Thierry Vircoulon, an associate researcher at the French Institute of International Relations, who has written a detailed analysis of Russian recruitment in Africa.
“During our study, we showed that these recruits are very often placed in units sent to the front line in the most dangerous areas,” he said.
“They are frequently used to detect Ukrainian positions. That is undoubtedly what is meant by calling them disposable – the death rate in these units is high because they are involved in the riskiest operations.”
Nairobi sounds alarm over recruiters luring Kenyans into Russian war effort
Bad PR for Moscow
Other videos circulating online show black soldiers in military fatigues being targeted by drones, pleading to be sent back to their home countries or giving interviews after being captured.
The footage has been shared mainly on Ukrainian platforms and serves several purposes, Vircoulon said.
“The first aim is to show that mercenaries are fighting within the Russian army,” he says. “The second is to undermine the Russian narrative that portrays Moscow as standing alongside African countries in their struggle against neocolonialism and in support of development.”
Ukrainian authorities say between 3,000 and 4,000 Africans are currently fighting in Russian ranks. If confirmed, the figure would further complicate Russia’s efforts to present itself as a partner to the Global South rather than a power exporting war.
This has been adapted from the original article by RFI in French
Uganda
‘He represents a population desperate for change’, Bobi Wine’s lawyer tells RFI
Uganda’s election on Thursday will see incumbent Yoweri Museveni, in power since 1986, seeking a seventh mandate – at the age of 81, in a country where 55 percent of the population is under 20. Supporters of his main rival, Bobi Wine, say he embodies hope for change. Robert Amsterdam, Wine’s international legal representative, told RFI of the difficulties he has faced in a campaign fraught with fear and repression.
RFI: For the opposition, and in particular for Bobi Wine, this electoral campaign has been very difficult. How would you describe it?
Robert Amsterdam: Let’s be really clear: this is a man who faces death each day. I was first brought in years ago as his lawyer when Museveni tried to kill Bobi by shooting into his car. Bobi was then brutally tortured and held in jail, in a town called Arua, Uganda.
And from that time, Bobi’s life has been in danger. And, unlike many, he did not flee his country. He has stood his ground, fighting for Ugandans every day. He is representative of a population that is overwhelmingly under the age of 18 and desperate for change. He is the symbol of change, of youth, not only in Uganda but in Africa. He is an important and emblematic symbol of the fight of this generation to be heard, and for the dinosaurs of previous generations to step out of the way.
The world should start being run by people who have to live in its future, not by those who created a pretty horrendous past in Uganda.
Bobi Wine’s fight for democracy in Uganda continues on the big screen
Many human rights organisations have criticised the repression and brutality they say has been seen during this electoral campaign. In light of this, how do you expect the election itself will go?
Of course, it’s going to impact the vote. The authorities have cut off the internet. They’ve divided Kampala into 14 military districts. There’s a massive, unprecedented mobilisation of the military. It’s absurd and obscene.
I’ve already had calls from people within the government, who are highly confident of the outcome and are already reaching out to me because they’re worried about what the response will be if there is another stolen election. So the government is gearing up to steal another election and deprive Uganda of its vote.
Uganda orders internet blackout ahead of presidential elections
Are there legal mechanisms in place that could ensure Ugandan voters get the result they deserve?
I also represent the opposition in Tanzania, where thousands [of people] were brutally murdered in another stolen election in this part of Africa. So I would be lying if I expressed great confidence in the [possibility of removing] a military dictator.
But at the same time, before a vote, however jaded it may be, I’m not going to make these comments. I’m going to pray for Bobi’s safety and for the safety of those with the courage to vote for him and against Museveni and his dynasty. Because he’s going to try to put his son in after he’s finished.
Do you think Ugandans can see a future where politicians like Wine can emerge? In Uganda and beyond?
He’s an inspirational figure, as is Tundu Lissu in Tanzania, who’s now in solitary confinement, after being shot 16 times in a prior election. I think these martyrs – and Bobi Wine is a martyr, having suffered through torture and false imprisonment – are heroes of real democracy, not failed leaders and tired policies. These are men of vision who are trying to bring their people out of desperate circumstances.
Uganda police surround opposition leader’s party HQ ahead of protests
What is your advice for those parties who may have to wait months, if not years, to be able to represent their voters?
The first thing we have to do is condemn the African Union for living in the past, for making corrupt pacts with unqualified autocrats. We need somewhere in Africa to have a moral stance, and the African Union needs to be a light – not a dim reminder of the past.
And we have great political figures in parts of Africa who are doing their best. Some of them I’ve come to know through a life in Africa. I’m privileged to act for the Democratic Republic of Congo. And there’s just a tremendous amount of inequality and despair that we need to turn around. And all of us who have invested parts of our lives in Africa, we need to not let another Ugandan election be stolen. We need to raise our voices.
Bobi Wine has promised there will be protests if the election is stolen. But can we be confident that people are going to be safe if that’s the case?
Absolutely not. There’s no confidence. You have a military that’s corrupt and out of control. People have every legitimate right to fear for their lives, in a country that has no claim to democracy and no claim to rule of law when it comes to elections.
After 40 years of the same ruler, is change possible in Uganda?
I will never bet against a popular vote, no matter how hijacked I fear an election can be. So let’s wait and see. My hopes and prayers are with the people of Uganda in this fateful 48 hours.
Geopolitics
Dark vessels: how Russia steers clear of Western sanctions with a shadow fleet
A shadow fleet of almost 1,000 ageing tankers – totalling 18.5 percent of global capacity – has been used since 2022 to dodge Western oil sanctions. These flag-hopping vessels with opaque ownership and frequent name changes ferry crude oil to Chinese “teapot” refineries from states including Russia, Venezuela and Iran.
On 1 October, 2025, French military personnel boarded the rust-streaked tanker Boracay just off the Bay of Biscay, after the captain, a Chinese national commanding a largely Chinese crew, ignored repeated orders to stop.
He was detained, and French prosecutors opened an investigation for refusal to obey a “lawful signal” and failing to prove the ship’s nationality – rendering it effectively stateless under international law, and boardable without flag-state consent.
On paper, the ship was registered in Benin, but this registration was marked “false” by the relevant shipping registries – the official records maintained by a flag state that document a vessel’s nationality and ownership, granting it the right to sail under that country’s flag.
The Boracay also appears on several blacklists, including that of the European Union, as a ship that has been caught “transporting crude oil or petroleum products … that originate in Russia or are exported from Russia while practising irregular and high-risk shipping practices”, as set out in resolutions of the International Maritime Organisation (IMO).
Its detention in France was just another stopover on an erratic journey – one that exemplifies the global movements of Russia’s shadow fleet.
EU hits Russia with sweeping new sanctions over Ukraine war
IMO 9332810
Launched in 2007 as Pacific Apollo, from a Japanese shipyard, the vessel is identifiable by its IMO number 9332810, the unique and unchangeable number assigned to every merchant ship for lifetime identification, regardless of name or flag changes.
It became Virgo Sun six years later, then sped through aliases from 2020: P. Fos, Odysseus, Varuna, Kiwala, Pushpa – and finally Boracay, from September 2025.
The vessel’s flags shifted rapidly too: the Marshall Islands, St Kitts and Nevis, Mongolia, Gabon, Djibouti, Gambia, Malawi and Benin – several lacking valid registration, according to Equasis, the database of the European Maritime Safety Agency (EMSA).
‘Name-hopping” is a hallmark of a so-called shadow fleet.
“There is no official definition of the shadow fleet,” according to Elisabeth Braw, a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council think tank.
“Different organisations use different definitions, but the characteristics that most of them include are flag-hopping, obscure ownership, uncertain P&I insurance, and the fact that they transport sanctioned cargo,” she told RFI.
The Boracay’s managers have included India’s Gatik Ship Management, a leading carrier of Russian oil since Ukraine’s invasion, and Turkish firm Unic Tanker Ship Management.
UK armed forces helped US mission to seize Russian tanker, MoD says
Drone attacks
In April 2025, when it arrived in Estonia after a long journey from India’s Sikka port, Estonian naval forces detained the IMO 9332810, then under the name Kiwala and registered in Djibouti – despite Djibouti cancelling its registry months earlier.
The ship was on the EU sanctions list, and heading for Russia.
Estonian inspectors found 40 “deficiencies” – issues that didn’t conform to shipping regulations – with 23 of them documentation-related.
However, they had to release the ship as there wasn’t enough evidence to hold it indefinitely.
It reached the Russian port of Ust-Luga in late April, then Primorsk near St Petersburg in September and changed name, this time becoming the Pushpa. According to Eurasia Daily and other shipping publications, this time it was filled with petrol.
As the Pushpa continued its journey, Danish authorities then linked it to suspicious drone flights over airports, forcing closures, although proof remains elusive.
On it went, through the English Channel and then southwards.
According to data from the Marine Traffic tracking website, the ship had been scheduled to arrive in Vadinar in north-western India on 20 October.
But it was followed by a French warship and local authorities boarded the ship – by now named the Boracay – off the coast near Saint-Nazare, and detained it.
Shadow fleet targeted as EU advances frozen assets plan for Ukraine
With the detention of the Boracay, French President Emmanuel Macron was fulfilling a promise that France and its EU partners would pursue a “policy of obstruction” against such shadow-fleet vessels.
However, it is not always easy to determine when maritime rules permit the physical challenge of these clandestine vessels.
“You can board and you can possibly detain if you have strong suspicions and allegations, but then if you can’t prove beyond reasonable doubt that that ship has been involved in some kind of crime, then you have to release it,” explains Braw.
She added: “Every vessel in the world has the right to sail on the world’s oceans… these shadow vessels don’t sail in the territorial waters of Western countries, they sail in the exclusive economic zone, where coastal states have fewer rights.”
The capture of the Boracay and the more recent detention of ships leaving Venezuela by United States forces are rare examples of national authorities taking action against the shadow fleet.
According to Braw, critics who have called Europe “spineless” in this regard often miss the point that governments follow the UN Convention of the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS,) making “systematic action against the shadow fleet… very difficult without stretching or violating maritime rules”.
Opaque ownership
Since its invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and subsequent sanctions, Russia has stepped up use of this fleet of ageing tankers with opaque ownership and shifting identities to circumnavigate Western restrictions on its oil exports.
When the G7 imposed a $60 per barrel price cap on Russian oil in December 2022, this shadow fleet trafficking of Russian oil exploded.
Today, S&P Global counts 978 tankers totalling 127 million deadweight tonnes – 18.5 percent of global capacity – with 54 of these vessels (9.5 million payload tonnes) being used for Venezuelan crude swaps.
“There is no official definition, no official list and no precise number,” says Braw. The EU’s 18 December, 2025 sanctions hit 605 vessels, nine enablers (including owners and shipping companies) as well as firms in the UAE, Vietnam and Russia; yet port bans are not universally applied.
EU on track to end Russian gas imports by end of 2027
Global reach
The recent US detention of two Venezuelan tankers, thought to be shipping sanctioned oil, exposed the fleet’s global reach.
Roughly 80 percent of Venezuela’s 1 million barrels per day flowed to China, says Eric Olander, co-founder of the China-Global South Project, adding that: “The vast majority of the oil that Venezuela was producing was going to China.” The majority arrived at its destination via the shadow fleet.
For Beijing, this is just a small slice of its total oil imports – some 4 percent.
Venezuelan heavy, sour crude oil is hard to refine. But smaller, independent refineries, mainly located in China’s eastern Shandong province – nicknamed “teapots” – specialise in processing this oil from Venezuela and Iran, and are dependent on it.
“The teapot refineries will be the most impacted because they have tuned their systems to these particular grades of crude from Iran and from Venezuela,” according to Olander.
Unlike Chinese oil giants Sinopec or PetroChina, “teapots” lack diversification. With Iranian oil comprising 14 percent of imports, combined Venezuelan-Iranian pressure could hit 20 percent of China’s barrel basket.
Meanwhile, French authorities released the Boracay after a detention of just a few days. At the time of writing, it was located in Malaysia.
The ship now also appears on the Russian maritime register, under the name Feniks and registered to the Russian port of Sochi – a move that could suggest acknowledgement by Russia of its involvement with this shadow fleet.
IRAN – PROTESTS
How Iran is enforcing an unprecedented digital blackout to crush protests
As protests continue across Iran, authorities are enforcing a near-total digital blackout – cutting internet and phone communications – as rights groups warn that hundreds of demonstrators have been killed. The shutdown is choking the protest movement and limiting what can be seen, verified and reported beyond Iran’s borders.
The blackout is making it far harder for protesters to communicate and for images and eyewitness accounts to reach the outside world. It has also disrupted daily life in Iran, where banking, payments and many basic services rely on digital networks.
For more than two and a half days, Iran has been largely cut off from the outside world and from itself. The flow of information inside the country and abroad has slowed to a trickle, with most Iranian websites inaccessible from outside Iran.
The nationwide shutdown began late on Thursday and quickly spread across the country. The independent monitoring group NetBlocks said the blackout had lasted for more than 60 hours, with national connectivity stuck at around 1 percent of normal levels.
“This censorship measure represents a direct threat to the safety and wellbeing of Iranians at a critical moment for the country’s future,” the organisation said.
Data published by the US-based internet infrastructure company Cloudflare also showed a massive collapse in online traffic coming out of Iran.
France’s Iranian diaspora divided over deadly protests back home
Protesters targeted
The demonstrations began on 28 December in Tehran, triggered by shopkeepers protesting against the rising cost of living and the collapse of the national currency. In the early days of the movement, the authorities focused their restrictions on urban areas and centres of unrest.
In Tehran, internet cuts targeted neighbourhoods known for protests, including Narmak, Molavi and the Grand Bazaar. The severity of the restrictions varied depending on location and internet provider.
In an analysis published by Filter Watch, a project that monitors online censorship in Iran, Nargès Keshavarznia from the human and digital rights group Miaan described how the shutdowns were closely synchronised with moments of mobilisation.
Internet access dropped sharply during protest gatherings and sometimes eased when streets emptied.
Earlier in the protests, Iran’s National Information Network, a domestic intranet developed since 2016 to allow the country to function while disconnected from the global internet, often remained accessible.
While international traffic was heavily restricted, some internal services continued to operate. That changed on Thursday night.
“Overall, all communication is impossible,” Amir Rashidi, an Iranian expert on cybersecurity and digital rights, told RFI, saying conditions had sharply worsened.
“It’s not just the internet that’s cut, but also phone communications, whether mobile or landline, inside the country and to or from abroad.”
Rashidi said the situation was constantly changing from one region to another, but making a phone call had become extremely difficult. “Sometimes you dial a number, you hear ‘beep, beep, beep’, and then nothing,” he said.
‘We’re fighting a daily battle’: Iranian women dare to shed hijab in public
Shutdown unprecedented
To get around the restrictions, more Iranians have turned to Starlink, a satellite internet service that allows users to connect without relying on local networks. In recent days, however, these devices appear to have been targeted by jamming attempts.
“Iran seems to have strengthened its ability to control these techniques for restricting internet access,” Valère Ndior, a law professor at the University of Western Brittany and a specialist in digital governance, told RFI.
Iran has repeatedly shut down communications during periods of unrest, notably during the 2019 protests, in 2022 after the death of Mahsa Amini – a 22-year-old woman who died in custody after being arrested by Iran’s morality police – and during the conflict with Israel in June 2025.
But Rashidi said the current blackout goes further than anything seen before. Even the National Information Network is down, he said, a situation without precedent.
“This national internet was one of the key tools of control for the Iran,” Rashidi said. Usually, he explained, people could still move within a closed internal network even if access to the outside world was blocked.
“Normally you can’t leave the building, but you can still move from room to room,” he said. “Now you’re stuck in a single room. You can’t even change rooms.”
The authorities are therefore accepting the paralysis of their own infrastructure to shut down every channel of communication, a sign that they believe “their survival is at stake”, Rashidi added.
South Africa’s joint drills a show of influence in the Indian Ocean
Unseen repression
Despite the blackout, protests have continued. A small number of videos circulating on social media, likely shared via satellite connections, show crowds marching in Tehran, Mashhad and other cities. The images could not be fully verified.
The digital silence has heightened fears of a violent crackdown taking place out of sight.
The Centre for Human Rights in Iran, a US-based non-profit, warned on Sunday that “a massacre is under way in Iran”, saying it had received “direct testimonies and credible reports” of hundreds of protesters killed.
The Norway-based group Iran Human Rights also reported that at least 192 demonstrators had been killed over two weeks of protests.
Other NGOs have warned the true number of deaths may be even higher, with some hospitals reporting more than 500 fatalities and rights advocates warning that the blackout is hindering efforts to document casualties accurately.
Beyond repression, the blackout is hitting daily life and the economy. “Cash machines don’t work, banks aren’t operating normally, people can’t cash cheques or access their money,” Rashidi said.
Ndior said it was still too early to measure the full impact, but warned that “the economic cost could run into hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars”.
Meanwhile, the X account of Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, continued to post messages. On Saturday evening, he wrote: “If God wills it, soon God will spread a feeling of victory in the hearts of all the Iranian people.”
This article was adapted from the original version in French by RFI’s Aurore Lartigue
Environment
Ice core vault preserving climate history opens in Antarctica
The Ice Memory Foundation on Wednesday opened the world’s first sanctuary for mountain ice cores in Antarctica, aiming to preserve crucial records of Earth’s climate for centuries to come.
Designed to protect ice cores from glaciers that are rapidly disappearing due to global warming, the sanctuary is housed in Concordia Station, a French-Italian research base located 3,200 metres above sea level.
The first samples, taken from two glaciers in the Alps, are stored in a purpose-built snow cave.
Buried about 5 metres beneath the surface, the cave maintains a constant temperature of -52C, allowing the ice to be preserved naturally without artificial refrigeration. It also minimises the risks from human or technical failures.
Scientists officially inaugurated the Ice Memory Sanctuary on Wednesday, amid outside temperatures of -33C.
“We are the last generation who can act,” said Anne-Catherine Ohlmann, director of the Ice Memory Foundation.
“It’s a responsibility we all share. Saving these ice archives is not only a scientific responsibility – it is a legacy for humanity.”
French scientists probe deep into Antarctica for clues on climate change
Preserving climate records
Launched in 2015 by research institutes and universities in France, Italy and Switzerland, the Ice Memory project was conceived after scientists noticed a sharp rise in temperature on several glaciers.
Since 2000, glaciers have lost between 2 percent and 39 percent of their ice regionally and about 5 percent globally, according to a study published in Nature in 2025.
As they melt, invaluable scientific records are lost.
Preserving ice cores will allow future scientists to study Earth’s climate history, explained Carlo Barbante, vice-chair of the Ice Memory Foundation and professor at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice.
“By safeguarding physical samples of atmospheric gases, aerosols, pollutants and dust trapped in ice layers, the Ice Memory Foundation ensures that future generations of researchers will be able to study past climate conditions using technologies that may not yet exist,” he said.
Natural vault
The Ice Memory Sanctuary measures 35 metres long and 5 metres high and wide.
Its stability is ensured by the extreme and naturally constant Antarctic temperatures.
The natural and low-impact snow cave was approved in 2024 under the Antarctic Treaty, which regulates the use of Antartica for scientific research, and was funded by the Prince Albert II Foundation.
Where will we store the ice cores?
It currently houses ice cores extracted from the Mont Blanc and Grand Combin glaciers in 2016 and 2025 respectively.
Scientists hope million-year-old Antarctic ice will reveal climate secrets
‘Race against time’
Dozens of additional ice cores from glaciers worldwide – such as in the Andes, Pamir, Caucasus and Svalbard mountain ranges – are expected to join the Ice Memory archive in the coming years.
An international governance framework will be established over the next decade to ensure fair and transparent scientific access for future generations.
On Wednesday, European climate monitors and US confirmed that 2025 was the third hottest year on record, pushing the planet closer to a key warming limit.
“We are in a race against time to rescue this heritage before it will vanish forever,” said Barbante.
Analysis
Macron seeks to reset France’s Africa policy amid shrinking influence
President Emmanuel Macron has called for a “rebalanced”, “equal-to-equal” partnership between France and African countries, signalling a continued shift away from the military-heavy approach that long defined France’s presence on the continent.
Speaking at the Élysée Palace during France’s annual meeting with ambassadors on Thursday, Macron said French policy towards Africa had undergone a fundamental change since 2017, when he declared in Ouagadougou: “There no longer is a French policy for Africa.”
France, he said, now sought partnerships that were not based primarily on historical or linguistic ties and did not automatically prioritise French-speaking countries.
A central element of this shift has been the overhaul of France’s military footprint in Africa.
Since Macron came to power in 2017, France has ended or drastically reduced its military presence in Central and West Africa, withdrawing troops from Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, Chad, Central African Republic, Cote d’Ivoire and Senegal.
Macron said France had “completely changed its mindset” on Africa since his speech in Ouagadougou, insisting that the reduction of its military presence, notably in Mali and Burkina, was a necessary correction rather than a retreat.
“We reviewed, and rightly so, our military bases,” he said, adding that France had “removed the military component that was no longer understood by countries and by younger generations”, while rebuilding “relevant” partnerships, notably in Benin.
Macron returns to Africa with drive for fresh partnerships on five-day tour
Obliged to adapt
Seidik Abba, a Nigerien academic specialising in the Sahel, contests the idea that France drove these changes.
“It is not true to say that it was France that decided to withdraw,” he told RFI, pointing to pressure from African governments and growing hostility among young people who viewed French bases and the CFA franc as relics of colonialism.
For security analyst Emmanuel Dupuy, head of the Institute for European Perspective and Security Studies, Macron’s reference to Ouagadougou obscures how different the context was in 2017. At the time, France’s Sahel strategy was underpinned by the apparent success of Operation Serval and, later, Barkhane – missions that directed French military might against jihadists.
“There was a form of politico-military euphoria,” Dupuy said, with African governments actively requesting French security support. That environment has since collapsed, following coups in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, and France’s expulsion from all three.
He describes the current phase as one of reluctant realism, with Paris “obliged to adapt” to a disengagement it did not choose.
‘End of an era’ as France pulls out of Mali. Was the mission a failure?
Boosting economic ties
With its military role curtailed, Paris is now seeking to “play another card”, Abba said, with greater emphasis on economic ties.
“As Macron himself has said, French companies need to be more aggressive and we need to move away from multinationals such as Bolloré and Total and work more closely with SMEs and French start-ups,” the analyst noted.
Macron said France’s renewed Africa policy would place greater emphasis on entrepreneurship, cultural and creative industries, and sport. Reaching young people and engaging with diasporas is seen as a crucial step.
In particular, France is seeking to expand relations with English-speaking African countries, moving beyond its traditional francophone partners.
“This is driven both by political considerations but above all the desire to gain market share and bring added value to the French economy,” Abba says.
Anglophone Africa
The French president pointed to a planned Africa summit in Nairobi in May 2026 as a milestone, describing it as “a very important meeting that will help embody this genuine revolution in our approach”.
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Germany’s Chancellor Friedrich Merz have been invited, illustrating what Macron said was a change in mindset.
Dupuy, however, sees the pivot to East Africa as an implicit admission of weakness. France, he argues, failed to consolidate influence in its former spheres and is now seeking opportunities in regions dominated by China, India and the United States.
“France is very poorly equipped – perhaps even completely disarmed – to be credible in this region of the world,” he said, noting intense competition over infrastructure corridors and strategic trade routes linking the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.
South Africa’s joint drills a show of influence in the Indian Ocean
Battle of narratives
Beyond economics and culture, Macron stressed the importance of countering disinformation, warning that France was losing ground in what he described as a “battle of narratives”.
“We must not lose this battle,” he said, arguing that French interests were also defended through countering disinformation and responding to accusations that France represented a new colonial power. Such narratives, he said, often drew on “anti-colonial”, “anti-European” and “anti-French” discourse and required a more robust response.
Dupuy is less alarmist. While acknowledging growing anti-French sentiment, he points to persistent demand for French support in certain security crises. France’s recent intervention in Benin, which helped stabilise President Patrice Talon’s government in the face of an attempted coup, was one such example.
“There is a paradox,” he said. “France is criticised for militarism, yet welcomed when its support proves decisive.”
Double standards?
Macron’s Africa policy has come under scrutiny for its uneven response to military coups.
A recent opinion piece in Benin’s La Nouvelle Tribune accused Macron of double standards in taking a hard line against juntas in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, while being more accommodating towards coup leaders in Gabon, Guinea and Chad. The writer said France’s selective approach undermines its democratic discourse and fuels anti-French sentiment.
Dupuy acknowledges the double standard, but argues that not all coups should be treated the same.
He suggests that the succession of Mahamat Déby in Chad in 2021 was a power transfer tacitly tolerated by France, rather than a putsch, and that military takeovers in Gabon and Guinea followed deeply contested electoral processes rather than explicit ruptures with Paris.
Elections, coups and crackdowns: Africa’s mixed democratic record in 2025
Gabon and Guinea have since embarked on transition processes, Dupuy explains, giving their leaders a degree of international legitimacy absent in the Sahel states, “where no credible electoral timelines exist”.
Yet Guinean military leader Mamadi Doumbouya had earlier pledged not to stand, and major opposition parties were barred from running. La Nouvelle Tribune criticised Macron’s decision to congratulate him on his election victory regardless.
“There is a democratic problem, for sure,” Dupuy said, “but you cannot call for elections on the one hand, validate the electoral process by observing the polls and talking about the need for transition, and at the same time fail to welcome the fact that this transition is taking place.”
‘Recognising’ Africa
In his speech, Macron also said France was closely monitoring crises in Sudan, the Horn of Africa and the Great Lakes region.
Dupuy was doubtful about France’s influence in such conflicts. “Everyone knows that France has no weight on the question of Sudan,” he said. And on the Great Lakes, “France has been marginalised by the Washington summit” that produced an historic peace deal between DR Congo and Rwanda.
While France is “in a phase of decline” on the African continent, he says we “shouldn’t completely bury” France’s presence. In addition to its soft power in sport, culture, the arts, heritage and returning artefacts, France, he argues, needs “to support Africans in their emergence as a power in their own right”.
“As the Americans are leaving the UN, we could take advantage of this to impose an African state as a permanent member of the Security Council,” the analyst suggested.
“President Macron made recognising Palestine his priority for 2025, and it worked. He could make bringing one or two African countries onto the Security Council his objective for 2026.
“It would be a game changer, just like recognising Palestine was.”
Uganda – election
Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine under house arrest as Museveni leads vote
Uganda’s main opposition candidate, Bobi Wine, was under house arrest, his party said, as early results on Friday showed veteran President Yoweri Museveni with a commanding lead in the presidential election.
Partial results released in the capital, Kampala, showed Museveni well ahead of his closest rival, as analysts said the outcome and further pressure on the opposition had been widely expected.
Museveni, who is 81, has ruled Uganda since he seized power in 1986 and is seeking what his party has described as a decisive victory.
The electoral commission announced early results after Thursday’s vote, showing Museveni with at least 76 percent of ballots counted from nearly half of polling stations.
Bobi Wine was on 19.85 percent, with the remaining votes shared among six other candidates.
House arrest
Wine, whose legal name is Robert Kyagulanyi, had called on supporters to protest, although there were no signs of demonstrations.
Late on Thursday, his party, the National Unity Platform (NUP), said security forces had surrounded his home.
“The military and police have surrounded the residence of President Kyagulanyi Ssentamu Robert, effectively placing him and his wife under house arrest,” the party wrote on social media.
It said “security officers have unlawfully jumped over the perimeter fence and are now erecting tents within his compound”.
The popular music star turned politician has emerged as Museveni’s main challenger in recent years and also ran in the 2021 election.
He alleged widespread fraud during the current polls, which were held under an internet blackout after a campaign marked by violence.
Uganda orders internet blackout ahead of presidential elections
Voting problems
Museveni said after casting his ballot that he expected to win with 80 percent of the vote “if there’s no cheating”.
National and international non-governmental organisations, including Amnesty International, have accused him of brutal repression of the opposition in the run-up to the vote.
The government imposed an internet blackout earlier in the week, while election day was marked by technical problems across the country.
Biometric machines used to verify voters’ identities malfunctioned in several areas, including when Museveni voted, and some ballot papers were delivered hours late.
There was also a heavy security presence nationwide during voting.
Succession worries
Analysts say the election was a foregone conclusion given Museveni controls the state and security apparatus and has crushed challengers during his four decades in power.
African affairs expert Jeffrey Smith, of the pro-democracy think tank Vanguard Africa, told RFI this outcome was expected.
“I suspect we’ll see an overwhelming reported victory for Museveni and a concerted government crackdown thereafter,” Smith said.
Concerns were now focused on what comes next for the country, he added – pointing to Uganda’s young population and warning of deeper instability.
“Uganda’s crisis is much bigger than Uganda, and that’s why it’s a crisis that demands urgent, authoritative action from both local and global actors,” he said.
If the results are confirmed, Museveni will begin a seventh term in office. He has said on several occasions that he wants his son, army chief Muhoozi Kainerugaba, to succeed him.
The United Nations rights office said last week the elections were taking place in an environment marked by “widespread repression and intimidation” against the opposition.
Final results from the presidential and parliamentary elections are due by 2am GMT on Saturday.
(with newswires)
France
French census draws criticism over question on parents’ place of birth
As France begins its annual census, rights groups are renewing criticism of a question asking where respondents’ parents were born – saying it will not help fight discrimination.
The question, “Where were your parents born?”, was added to the census last year.
It was criticised by the Human Rights League (LDH) and other organisations, which questioned why the information was needed.
The census is designed to build a picture of the French population and help shape public policy.
Listen to a history of the census in France in the Spotlight on France podcast:
The LDH said information on people with foreign-born parents was already collected through other statistical studies and did not need to be included in the census.
“The question is not about us, it’s about our parents,” wrote the LDH in a letter published Sunday.
Use of census data
The census is run by the national statistics institute Insee. Its head of demographics, Muriel Barlet, defended the question.
“Answers will be used to highlight questions about segregations on a local level,” she told RFI.
France has a sensitive history with ethnic and racial statistics. During the Second World War, the French state collaborated with Nazi Germany and census data was used to identify Jews in France, many of whom were later deported.
A 1978 law bans the collection of personal data linked to a person’s origin or race. However, indirect methods are allowed, including questions about parents.
The LDH said it was concerned the data would not lead to concrete anti-discrimination policies and could be misused if accessed by the wrong people.
The group has called on census respondents not to answer the parents’ birthplace question, which is optional, even though completing the census itself is mandatory.
Adieu to the Chinese pandas
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about the pandas in the Beauval Zoo. There are your answers to the bonus question on “The Listeners Corner” and a tasty musical dessert on Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan”. All that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.
World Radio Day is just around the corner, so it’s time for you to record your greetings for our annual World Radio Day programme!
WRD is on 13 February; we’ll have our celebration the day after, on the 14 February show. The deadline for your recordings is Monday 2 February, which is not far off!
Try to keep your greeting to under a minute. You can record on your phone and send it to me as an attachment in an e-mail to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
Be sure to record your greeting from underneath a blanket. Then the sound will be truly radiophonic – I mean, you want everyone to understand you, right?
Don’t miss out on the fun. 2 February is just around the corner, so to your recorders!
Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!
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Our website “Le Français facile avec rfi” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.
Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”, and you’ll be counselled on the best-suited activities for your level according to your score.
Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service, told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it”. She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!
Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!
In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.
There’s Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, the International Report, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We also have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis.
Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our excellent staff of journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!
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This week’s quiz: On 29 November, I asked you a question about two Chinese pandas – Huan Huan and Yuan Zi – who were in the Beauval Zoo here in France, and had just gone back to China.
You were to re-read our article “France says goodbye to star pandas going back to China” and send in the answer to this question: How many cubs did Huan Huan give birth to while here in France?
The answer is, to quote our article: “Huan Huan gave birth to three cubs – the first to be born in France. The eldest, Yuan Ming, a male, was sent back to China two years ago, but twins born in August 2021 will remain at Beauval at least until 2027.” The twins’ names are Hunalili and Yuandudu.
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question, suggested by RFI English listener Sadequl Bari Liton from Naogaon, Bangladesh, “How do you spend your weekly holiday?”
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: Nafisa Khatun, the president of the RFI Mahila Shrota Sangha Club in West Bengal, India. Nafisa is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations on your double win, Nafisa.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are A. K. M. Nuruzzaman, the president of the RFI Amour Fan Club in Rajshahi, Bangladesh, and RFI Listeners Club members Samir Mukhopadhyay from West Bengal, India; Kanwar Sandhu from British Columbia in Canada, and last but not least, Habib Ur Rehman Sehla, the president of the International Radio Fan and Youth Club in Khanewal, Pakistan.
Congratulations winners!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “In the Hall of the Mountain King” from Peer Gynt by Edvard Grieg, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Nicolò Foron; the traditional Chinese “Sun Quan the Emperor”; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer; “L’auzel ques sul bouyssou” (“Bird sitting in the Bush”) by Estienne Moulinié, sung by Claire Lefilliâtre with Le Poème Harmonique conducted by Vincent Dumestre.
Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read Paul Myers’ article “France launches recruitment for 10-month voluntary national military service”, which will help you with the answer.
You have until 9 February to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 14 February podcast. When you enter, be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
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Migration
Bodies of more than 20 African migrants found in mass grave in Libya
The bodies of at least 21 migrants have been found in a mass grave on a farm in eastern Libya, security sources have said, with as many as 10 others who survived captivity showing signs of of torture. It is the latest tragedy involving people seeking to reach Europe through the North African country.
The sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said authorities raided a farm near the town of Ajdabiya after receiving a report of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa being held there.
“We found migrants – men, women and children – bearing signs of torture. They were taken to a hospital where they reported that other migrants had been with them and then disappeared,” one of the security sources told Reuters news agency on Thursday.
The mass grave was discovered some 10km south-east of Ajdabiya, which is around 160km from Benghazi – the second largest city in the North African country and which is under the control of forces loyal to Libya’s army strongman Khalifa Haftar.
The Internal Security Agency confirmed the discovery of the mass grave to broadcaster al-Masar.
The channel, which is aligned with Haftar, said the suspect was detained during a raid on the farm and had admitted the presence of a mass grave on his property.
Inhumane treatment of migrants in Libya: the EU is ‘complicit’ says filmmaker
Cause of death unclear
Unverified pictures posted online showed a number of security personnel and Red Crescent volunteers placing bodies allegedly found on the farm property into black plastic bags.
How the migrants died remained unclear and investigations were underway, said one of the security sources.
Libya remains one of the main departure points for tens of thousands of migrants fleeing conflict and poverty, mainly from sub-Saharan Africa. Many are taking dangerous routes across the desert and over the Mediterranean to reach Europe.
The North African country has been in turmoil since the fall of Moamer Khadafi‘s regime in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011.
It led to rival administrations in 2014: the UN-recognised Government of National Unity in Tripoli and the Government of National Stability, based in Benghazi.
Libya’s oil-based economy also draws migrants seeking work, but poor security leaves them vulnerable to abuse.
Libya expels over 200 migrants across land borders
Migrant tragedies
In July, more than 100 migrants, including five women, were freed from captivity in Ajdabiya after being held for ransom by a gang, according to Libya’s attorney general.
In September, the UN International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said at least 50 people had died after a vessel carrying 75 Sudanese refugees caught fire off Libya’s coast.
In mid-October, 61 bodies of migrants were recovered on the Mediterranean coast west of Tripoli.
In February this year security authorities recovered nearly 50 bodies from two mass graves in the south-eastern desert.
UN data collected in 100 Libyan municipalities between August and October 2025 showed they were hosting a total of 928,839 migrants from 44 countries.
At a UN meeting in Geneva in November, several states including the UK, Spain, Norway and Sierra Leone urged Libya to close detention centres where rights groups say migrants and refugees have been tortured, abused and sometimes killed.
The IOM recorded nearly 1,000 migrant deaths and disappearances in Libya in 2024 alone.
(with newswires)
War in Ukraine
France now supplies most of Ukraine’s intelligence, Macron says
France is now providing two-thirds of the intelligence Ukraine needs in its war with Russia, President Emmanuel Macron said, overtaking the United States as Kyiv’s main source of intelligence support.
Washington briefly suspended intelligence sharing with Ukraine in March as part of efforts to pressure Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to cooperate with President Donald Trump’s bid to convene peace talks with Russia.
In his New Year’s address to the French military on Thursday, Macron said that France was now providing Ukraine with the bulk of the intelligence capabilities it needed in the war.
“Whereas a year ago Ukraine was overwhelmingly dependent on American intelligence capabilities, today two-thirds are provided by France,” he said at the Istres air base in south-eastern France.
Macron also praised Europe’s role over the past two years in taking over major parts of weapons support for Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022.
The 34 countries of the Coalition of the Willing are financing “100 percent” of the resources granted to Kyiv, including financial support, Macron said.
He added that this followed Washington’s decision to stop funding or directly supplying weapons to Ukraine.
Brussels lays out €90bn loan for Ukraine with military focus
No confirmation from Ukraine
Macron’s comments contrast with remarks made by Kyrylo Budanov, who was appointed head of Zelensky’s office and previously led Ukraine’s military intelligence.
In December, Budanov said Kyiv remained critically dependent on Washington for intelligence, including satellite imagery and early warning systems for ballistic missile launches.
Ukraine’s GUR military intelligence agency declined to comment.
A French defence ministry official also declined to comment directly on the president’s claims, but said much of the intelligence France provides is technical in nature.
Macron seeks €36bn boost in French defence spending by 2030
US role still significant
Despite strained relations between Washington and Kyiv, there has been no indication that the United States has sharply reduced its intelligence support for Ukraine.
When Washington suspended intelligence sharing in 2025, France’s then defence minister Sebastien Lecornu, now prime minister, said the move would have a significant operational impact on Ukraine.
He added that France’s intelligence support for Kyiv did not rely on Washington.
(with newswires)
FRENCH POLITICS
France says parliamentary approval of budget is ‘impossible’
Paris (AFP) – France’s government has halted budget discussions in parliament and is expected to announce Friday a way forward after failing to gain backing from lawmakers for this year’s spending bill.
The eurozone’s second-largest economy has been bogged down in political crisis since President Emmanuel Macron called snap polls in 2024, in which he lost his majority.
In a bid to survive being toppled by parliament like his two predecessors, Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu last year pledged to seek parliament approval for a 2026 austerity budget – and not ram it through without a vote.
He managed to get a bill on social security spending approved by year end, but lawmakers have failed to reach a compromise on state expenses.
Lecornu’s office said late Thursday that it would be “impossible to adopt a budget by a vote” and that it would be looking at two alternative options.
One is to use a constitutional power under “Article 49.3” to push the legislation through parliament without a vote, as for previous budgets.
France’s article 49.3 a handy constitutional tool to bypass parliament
That can trigger a no-confidence vote, which could topple the government and its spending bill with it.
Lecornu would have to reach a deal with the Socialists – a key swing group – to avoid this scenario.
The other option is for the first time issuing a decree that forces the budget directly into law.
That too could trigger a no-confidence vote, but the budget would survive even if the cabinet was ousted.
The government has suspended further budget debates until Tuesday.
Deficit to deadlock: why France is borrowing €310bn without a budget
Lawmakers from across the political spectrum have emerged exasperated after months of back and forth, and are looking for to a swift resolution.
“I’m tired of having the same debate over and over again,” said right-wing Republicans lawmaker Marie-Christine Dalloz.
“I’m really looking forward to the end of this episode.”
Greens member of parliament Steevy Gustave said he felt like a “robot” repeating the same thing every day.
“If only there had been results, some compromises – but no,” he said.
Geopolitics
France to step up Greenland deployment with land, air and sea forces
France began deploying troops to Greenland on Thursday and said it would send additional “land, air and sea” forces in the coming days, confirming the presence of high-mountain specialists from the French army on the ground as part of a European military exercise after inconclusive talks in Washington.
The move followed an emergency defence council convened at the Élysée on Greenland and Iran, after which President Emmanuel Macron travelled to the Istres air base in southern France to deliver his annual address to the armed forces.
Macron confirmed overnight that France was taking part, at Denmark’s request, in joint military exercises in Greenland alongside Germany and Nordic countries.
“The first French military personnel are already on their way. Others will follow,” the president said on X.
The deployment comes amid growing tension within NATO after US President Donald Trump renewed claims on Greenland, an autonomous Danish territory, arguing it is vital for American security.
His remarks have alarmed European allies and unsettled transatlantic relations.
During the address, Macron said a first team of French soldiers was already on the ground in Greenland and would be reinforced in the coming days by additional land, air and maritime assets.
Macron warns of ‘cascading consequences’ if US seizes Greenland
European forces en route
France’s ambassador for the poles, Olivier Poivre d’Arvor, said around 15 French soldiers were already involved.
“They are high-mountain specialists such as the chasseurs alpins,” he told FranceInfo radio, adding they were taking part in a preparation exercise “aimed at deterrence” to “show the United States that NATO is present”.
The mission, known as Operation Arctic Endurance, is running from Thursday to Saturday.
Germany said it was sending a 13-member reconnaissance team to Nuuk over the same period, while Sweden and Norway are also taking part. Denmark’s armed forces said they would continue strengthening their military presence in Greenland with support from European allies.
Greenland’s deputy prime minister, Mute Egede, said NATO soldiers were expected to be “more present” in the coming days, with additional military flights and ships. He described the activities as training.
Political pressure in Paris
The Greenland deployment comes as France struggles to agree a 2026 budget. Macron has asked parliament to increase military spending by 3.5 billion euros next year, citing the war in Ukraine and an increasingly brutal world.
Jean-Philippe Tanguy, a senior figure in the far-right Rassemblement national party, called on Macron to explain France’s position clearly.
He urged the president “to speak directly to the French people” about Greenland and the situation in Iran.
Tensions sharpened after talks in Washington on Wednesday between American, Danish and Greenlandic officials failed to bridge differences over Greenland.
Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen said a US takeover of the territory was “absolutely not necessary”.
“We have a fundamental disagreement, but we also agree to disagree,” he told reporters.
Trump later struck a more conciliatory tone, saying he had “a very good relationship with Denmark” while again refusing to rule out any options.
(with newswires)
Podcast: Reinventing retirement, saving a Paris cinema, counting the French
Issued on:
An alternative to a retirement home in a mansion near Toulouse, where residents have invented a new way of living together and contributing to society. The David-and-Goliath story of an independent Parisian cinema that’s reopening after years of fighting eviction. And the story behind France’s annual census.
Scandals over abuse of the elderly in French care homes, combined with growing loneliness among pensioners, are forcing reflection on how – and where – people spend their later years. Three decades after founding the Utopia network of independent cinemas, Anne-Marie Faucon and Michel Malacarnet have turned their energy and experience towards imagining an alternative to traditional retirement homes. Their project, La Ménardiere, is an 18th-century mansion in the small town of Bérat, in south-west France. It operates as a shared-living collective, where residents, known as coopérateurs, are also shareholders. By taking control of their own destinies, they have created a model that also provides services and cultural activities for the surrounding community. Residents describe the approach as ageing together in a house that is “on the offensive”. (Listen @4′)
La Clef, an historic arthouse cinema in Paris, has reopened its doors after a group of residents, cinephiles and activists spent years protesting its closure. Ollia Horton met some of those who took part in a years-long occupation of the theatre that resulted in the activists raising enough money to buy the building from owners who wanted to sell the prime piece of real estate in the centre of the city. (Listen @21’48”)
As census-takers fan out around France to begin the annual counting of the population, we look at a process that started in the 14th century. During World War II the census was co-opted by Nazi occupiers to identify Jews, and while it has since stripped out questions relating to race and religion, it recently added controversial ones about parental origins. (Listen @17’10”)
Episode mixed by Cecile Pompeani.
Spotlight on France is a podcast from Radio France International. Find us on rfienglish.com, Apple podcasts (link here), Spotify (link here) or your favourite podcast app (pod.link/1573769878).
FRANCE – DEFENCE
Macron seeks €36bn boost in French defence spending by 2030
France must make “efforts cope with our tough times”, President Emmanuel Macron said on Thursday, calling for an additional €36 billion for the country’s armed forces by 2030 to “accelerate our rearmament”.
Speaking at the Istres-Le Tubé Air Base in southern France, where he delivered his New Year’s address to the military, Macron said France needed to move faster.
“To be powerful in this brutal world, we must act faster and stronger,” he said.
Macron said an updated Military Programming Law for 2026-2030 would include the extra €36 billion to boost defence spending.
The current 2024-2030 Military Programming Law (LPM) provides €413 billion, which Macron said he wants parliament to adopt “by 14 July”.
France deploys troops as Europe moves into Greenland
Rising defence budget
The delayed 2026 budget sets aside €57.2 billion for the armed forces, up 13 percent. It includes an extra €3.5 billion that was not planned under the current framework.
Macron last summer also called for another €3 billion spending surge in 2027.
He said the additional €36 billion was needed to “preserve the operational credibility of our forces” and to be ready for “a major engagement within three to four years”, amid concern over Russia’s threat to European security.
Macron said the money would fund “three main priorities”.
France’s Macron wants more young volunteers ‘to reinforce’ the army
Military priorities
He said the focus would include increasing ammunition stocks and strengthening troop readiness.
Macron said France also needed to strengthen sovereignty capabilities, including satellite-based early warning systems to detect long-range missile attacks.
He said France would also boost protection and strike capacity, with more air-defence systems, anti-drone measures and long-range drones.
As European nations increase defence spending, Macron renewed his call for defence contractors to raise production.
“We need to produce faster, in greater volume, with lighter and more innovative systems,” he said, warning firms could be “pushed out of the market”.
(with newswires)
SPACE
France’s Sophie Adenot to spend nine months on ISS after medical evacuation
French astronaut Sophie Adenot’s first mission to the International Space Station is being brought forward and extended to nine months after an unprecedented medical evacuation forced a reshuffle of the station’s crew rota.
NASA said Adenot’s Epsilon mission, originally planned for mid-February, could now launch as early as 8 February from Florida. The space agency also confirmed the mission will last nine months instead of the usual six.
The change tightens an already packed training and launch schedule for the 43-year-old test pilot, who is part of the European Space Agency’s (ESA) astronaut corps.
NASA had previously planned the launch “no earlier than 15 February” 2026 aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon as part of the Crew-12 mission.
After the early return of Crew-11, US planners are now studying options to move the launch forward by several days to maintain a continuous human presence on the station.
French astronaut Thomas Pesquet sets his sights on the Moon after ISS success
Extended stay
The extension to nine months makes the mission one of the longest stays ever assigned to a European astronaut on the ISS.
Adenot has said she is preparing for “a marathon, not a sprint” in microgravity, with a heavier workload of scientific experiments during the longer mission.
The changes follow the first medical evacuation in the history of the ISS, which has been continuously inhabited for more than 25 years.
Four members of NASA’s Crew-11 mission splashed down in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego after their flight was cut short by about a month because of a health problem affecting one astronaut.
NASA has not identified the crewmember or given details of the diagnosis, saying the condition is stable and that the return was a precaution to allow full medical checks on the ground.
Agency doctors cited a “lingering risk and a lingering question” around the diagnosis, leading to a carefully weighed decision rather than an emergency evacuation.
Crew reshuffle
The early departure left the ISS with just three residents and increased pressure to send Crew-12, including Adenot, to restore a full working crew.
Adenot will launch aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon with NASA astronauts Jessica Meir and Jack Hathaway and Russian cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev.
Meir has been named commander of the mission. Hathaway will pilot the capsule, while Adenot and Fedyaev will serve as mission specialists.
The flight will make Adenot the second Frenchwoman in space, more than 30 years after Claudie Haigneré’s missions in the 1990s. She will also be the first French astronaut to visit the ISS since Thomas Pesquet’s Alpha mission in 2021.
During her stay, Adenot is expected to oversee dozens of European and French experiments, including work on plant biology, human physiology and technology tests linked to future Moon missions under NASA’s Artemis programme.
International cooperation
Orbiting about 400 kilometres above Earth, the ISS is used for research that cannot be carried out on the ground, including studies of the human body in weightlessness.
Crews are trained for both scientific work and emergencies, including medical situations like the one that led to Crew-11’s early return.
The station is one of the last arenas of structured cooperation between the United States and Russia since the war in Ukraine, with NASA, Roscosmos, ESA, JAXA and the Canadian Space Agency all contributing modules, cargo ships and crew.
Mixed crews continue to rotate through the station, with US spacecraft carrying Russian cosmonauts and Russian Soyuz capsules still transporting NASA astronauts.
In operation since 2000, the ISS has hosted more than 200 people from around 20 countries.
NASA and its partners plan to operate it until the end of the decade, before guiding it to a controlled re-entry over the remote Pacific “spacecraft graveyard” known as Point Nemo in 2031.
(with newswires)
War in Ukraine
Brussels lays out €90bn loan for Ukraine with military focus
The European Unionhas detailed a vast new €90-billion loan package for Ukraine aimed at keeping the country’s economy afloat and strengthening its defence as Russia’s invasion approaches its fifth year.
Around two-thirds of the funds, about €60 billion euros, will be used to support Kyiv’s military, while the remaining €30 billion euros will cover general budget needs, including public sector salaries and energy subsidies.
The European Commission said it hopes to make the first payment in April, pending approval from the European Parliament and EU member states.
“With this support, Ukraine can bolster its defence on the battlefield while keeping the state and basic services running,” EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told reporters in Brussels on Wednesday.
She said the funds would primarily finance weapons and equipment produced in Ukraine or within the EU, a move designed to sustain Europe’s defence industry and reduce reliance on the United States.
If certain equipment is unavailable or cannot be delivered quickly enough from European suppliers, Kyiv may be allowed to source it from outside the continent.
However, any such exceptions will require prior notification to an expert group to maintain what officials call a “Made in Europe” principle.
As Europe pours money into defence, reliance on US remains a sticking point
Frozen Russian assets
The loan package, backed by the EU’s common budget, follows months of talks after an earlier plan to finance Ukraine using frozen Russian assets failed to gain unanimous support.
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever had opposed the use of the roughly €210 billion in immobilised Russian central bank funds, most of which are held under Belgian jurisdiction.
The new scheme exempts Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic from underwriting the joint debt to secure unanimous agreement.
Brussels will cover the annual interest costs, estimated at around €3–4 billion, using leftover EU funds, with member states stepping in if those fall short.
“This is a lot of money – billions being invested – and these investments should have a return in jobs, in research and development,” von der Leyen said, linking the loan to Europe’s security and industrial capacity.
According to EU officials, negotiations with G7 partners are under way to ensure other Western donors frontload their financial assistance to Ukraine in the first quarter of 2026, helping plug immediate shortfalls before the EU loan begins to flow.
(with newswires)
africa cup of nations 2025
Morocco beat Nigeria on penalties to set up Senegal final at Cup of Nations
Morocco beat Nigeria in a penalty shootout on Wednesday night in Rabat to advance to the final of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations.
A game dominated by the hosts from the outset ended 0-0 after the regulation 90 minutes and 30 minutes of extra-time.
Morocco goalkeeper Yassine Bounou saved shootout strikes from Samuel Chukwueze and Bruno Onyemaechi to furnish Youssef En-Nesyri with the chance to send a national team into a Cup of Nations final for the first time since 2004.
The 28-year-old Fenerbahce striker swept home confidently past the Nigeria goalkeeper Stanley Nwabali and wheeled away before he was submerged by a pile of gleeful teammates.
The Moroccans entered the game on the back of a 23-match unbeaten streak which had taken them to the top of the African rankings.
Nigeria, containing two former African footballers of the year in the shapes of Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman, had been the most prolific team of the competition notching up 14 goals in their five games en route to the semi-final in Rabat.
But from the moment referee Dan Laryea blew the whistle, that dynamic duo and the rest of their accomplices were second best.
The passing that had scythed through the likes of Tunisia, Mozambique and Algeria was absent or wayward.
Akor Adams, so vibrant in previous games down the right wing was unable to link up consistently with the roving Lookman or Osimhen’s darts into space.
Starved of possession and angles reduced, the Nigerians sunk into listlessness or clumsiness on the ball.
Egypt dethrone Côte d’Ivoire to reach semis at the Africa Cup of Nations
On a rare sortie forward after 14 minutes, Lookman forced Bounou to beat away a shot.
But it was brief interlude in the Nigerian drama of pain.
The Moroccans kept them under the cosh but failed to inflict the killer blow.
Ayoub El Kaabi could not wrap his foot around a knockdown into the penalty area after 28 minutes to get his shot away.
Brahim Diaz’s curler skimmed past the post and Abdessamad Ezzalzouli twice tested Nwabali.
The pattern remained the same throughout the second-half: Moroccan domination without incision.
In the last four minutes of extra-time, Nigeria slowed the game down seemingly happy to be still alive after so much time spent chasing shadows.
Following the two fluffed shots, their campaign ended to the delight of the mostly Moroccan fans in the 66,000 crowd at the Stade Prince Moulay Abdellah.
On Sunday night at the same venue, Achraf Hakimi will attempt to become the first Morocco skipper to lift the Africa Cup of Nations trophy since 1976.
His side will face Senegal who beat Egypt 1-0 in the first semi-final in Tangier.
Sadio Mané scored the only goal of the game in the 78th minute to terminate Egypt’s attempt to brandish a record-extending eighth continental crown.
France – UK
France bans 10 British ‘far-right activists’ over anti-migrant actions
French authorities have banned 10 British far-right activists for actions in France intended to stop migrants crossing to England on small boats, the Interior Ministry said on Wednesday.
Immigration has become a central political issue in the United Kingdom, as the government seeks to stem a wave of undocumented migrants arriving on British shores after paying smugglers to cross the Channel.
The arrivals have fuelled widespread public concern and rising anger on the British far right, and since last year videos have circulated of anti-migrant vigilantes visiting France to take matters into their own hands.
France’s interior ministry said it responded to reports that members of the “Raise the Colours” movement had conducted anti-migrant activities in France.
On Tuesday, “territorial bans were issued against 10 British nationals, identified as activists within the movement and having carried out actions on French soil”, it said.
“Raise the Colours” on X denounced the ban as “absolutely disgraceful”.
In a written comment to French news agency AFP, it said it understood the ban targeted “specific individuals, rather than the organisation as a whole”.
“Raise the Colours has always maintained that its activities must remain peaceful and within the law. The organisation does not support violence or any unlawful activity,” it added.
Its website on Wednesday included a banner that said the movement did not support “vigilante behaviour” or “anyone travelling to France, approaching migrant vessels, or attempting to intervene in crossings”.
‘Not welcome’
The French ministry said it would not name the 10 people, and did not describe the exact nature of their actions.
French authorities have opened an investigation over an alleged “aggravated assault” on migrants in September in a coastal area near the northern city of Dunkirk.
Four men carrying British and English flags verbally and physically assaulted a group of migrants in Grand-Fort-Philippe on the night on September 9 to 10, telling them they were not welcome in England, a charity working with migrants called Utopia 56 told AFP.
“Raise The Colours”, in a post on X responding to a news report of the probe in November, however claimed it had “only been going over to France in the past month”.
Another of its social media accounts on Instagram late last year posted videos of anti-immigration activists on France’s northern coastline.
UK struggles to reduce migrant crossings after near-record in 2025
In one video posted in November, a man filmed himself on a French beach, saying he had found a small inflatable boat buried in the sand and had slashed it.
“That is not going to England,” said the man, who elsewhere has called himself Ryan Bridge.
In another post published earlier the same month, he waded into the sea shouting at what appeared to be dozens of undocumented migrants boarding an inflatable dinghy on their way to England.
“You’re not welcome in our country,” he said, calling the passengers “potential rapists, murderers and child abusers”.
In a third November video, Bridge filmed himself in the French capital speaking to would-be migrants.
AFP had spotted three such individuals on a beach in the northern area of Gravelines on 5 December.
‘Fan hatred’
Paul Alauzy, from the French NGO Médecins du Monde that helps migrants, welcomed what he described as a travel ban against “far-right activists who fan hatred and sow division by targeting extremely vulnerable people who are simply seeking refuge”.
A spokeswoman from L’Auberge des Migrants, who asked to remain anonymous, said it was a good move from the French authorities, but that it came very late.
Her charity had been signalling a problem since May last year, she said, adding they had received reports of people being tasered and person who had their arm broken.
French aid groups complain of harassment by British anti-immigration vigilantes
The debate about immigration in the United Kingdom last year triggered a new trend of flying English and British flags.
Anti-racism campaigners say far-right activists are behind the main organisers, “Raise the Colours”.
Last year saw the second highest number of undocumented migrants arrive on British shores since such crossings began in 2018.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has struggled to reduce the number of migrants arriving in the country – the vast majority of them legally.
The issue is being exploited by the anti-immigration Reform party led by Nigel Farage.
(with AFP)
FRANCE – PROTESTS
French farmers lift Paris blockade after government concessions
French farmers began lifting their blockade of Paris early Wednesday after the government pledged debt relief measures and an emergency farm law, as protests driven by opposition to the EU-Mercosur trade deal continued elsewhere in the country.
Tractors from the FNSEA, France’s main farmers’ union, and the Jeunes Agriculteurs, which represents younger farmers, started leaving the capital around 4am after spending about 24 hours positioned near the National Assembly.
The departure followed overnight talks with the government after days of mobilisation over farm debt, costs and regulation.
FNSEA vice-president Luc Smessaert said a delegation met Agriculture Minister Annie Genevard shortly before midnight.
“The agriculture minister gave us details and commitments on cash-flow loans and restructuring for the most indebted farmers,” he told the French news agency AFP.
Hundreds of tractors roll into Paris as farmers protest EU-Mercosur trade deal
Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announced on Tuesday that an emergency agricultural law would be presented to the cabinet in March and examined by parliament before the summer.
He said the bill would focus on water, predation by wolves and production tools.
Farmers say the EU-Mercosur trade deal would expose them to cheaper agricultural imports from South America produced under lower standards, putting French producers at a disadvantage.
The government’s announcements closely match demands made by the FNSEA and Jeunes Agriculteurs, the dominant alliance in French farm unionism whose regional branches around Paris launched tractor convoys into the capital.
Promises to calm the crisis
Lecornu also called for a moratorium on decisions linked to water policy, including a suspension of rules setting water withdrawal volumes until September. He asked for meetings to examine possible exemptions from the EU nitrates directive, which regulates fertiliser use.
These steps add to a €300 million support package promised on Friday, combining budget measures subject to a parliamentary vote with other measures already announced to respond to the agricultural crisis.
While tensions eased in Paris, mobilisation continued elsewhere.
In Toulouse, around 40 farmers from the Coordination Rurale union entered the city centre overnight despite a prefectural ban, parking their tractors close to the prefecture before being blocked by security forces.
EU countries green-light Mercosur trade deal despite France’s opposition
“This is the state’s response when we have been given no answers, apart from the signing of Mercosur,” said Vincent Arbusti, a spokesperson for the Coordination Rurale in the Gers department, who confirmed that five people were arrested.
Police later removed the tractors. Farmers then set up a checkpoint near Toulouse-Blagnac airport, where about 10 tractors disrupted traffic on a roundabout.
Early Wednesday, farmers blocked a major motorway near Toulouse, cutting traffic in both directions and causing serious disruption.
Another slow-moving tractor protest was also under way on a main road in the Var region.
(with newswires)
Adieu to the Chinese pandas
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen, you’ll hear the answer to the question about the pandas in the Beauval Zoo. There are your answers to the bonus question on “The Listeners Corner” and a tasty musical dessert on Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan”. All that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.
World Radio Day is just around the corner, so it’s time for you to record your greetings for our annual World Radio Day programme!
WRD is on 13 February; we’ll have our celebration the day after, on the 14 February show. The deadline for your recordings is Monday 2 February, which is not far off!
Try to keep your greeting to under a minute. You can record on your phone and send it to me as an attachment in an e-mail to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
Be sure to record your greeting from underneath a blanket. Then the sound will be truly radiophonic – I mean, you want everyone to understand you, right?
Don’t miss out on the fun. 2 February is just around the corner, so to your recorders!
Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!
Facebook: Be sure to send your photos for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write RFI English in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.
Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!
Our website “Le Français facile avec rfi” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.
Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”, and you’ll be counselled on the best-suited activities for your level according to your score.
Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service, told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it”. She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!
Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!
In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.
There’s Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, the International Report, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We also have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis.
Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our excellent staff of journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!
To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.
To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.
Teachers take note! I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below.
Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in all your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. NB: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!
This week’s quiz: On 29 November, I asked you a question about two Chinese pandas – Huan Huan and Yuan Zi – who were in the Beauval Zoo here in France, and had just gone back to China.
You were to re-read our article “France says goodbye to star pandas going back to China” and send in the answer to this question: How many cubs did Huan Huan give birth to while here in France?
The answer is, to quote our article: “Huan Huan gave birth to three cubs – the first to be born in France. The eldest, Yuan Ming, a male, was sent back to China two years ago, but twins born in August 2021 will remain at Beauval at least until 2027.” The twins’ names are Hunalili and Yuandudu.
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question, suggested by RFI English listener Sadequl Bari Liton from Naogaon, Bangladesh, “How do you spend your weekly holiday?”
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: Nafisa Khatun, the president of the RFI Mahila Shrota Sangha Club in West Bengal, India. Nafisa is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations on your double win, Nafisa.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are A. K. M. Nuruzzaman, the president of the RFI Amour Fan Club in Rajshahi, Bangladesh, and RFI Listeners Club members Samir Mukhopadhyay from West Bengal, India; Kanwar Sandhu from British Columbia in Canada, and last but not least, Habib Ur Rehman Sehla, the president of the International Radio Fan and Youth Club in Khanewal, Pakistan.
Congratulations winners!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “In the Hall of the Mountain King” from Peer Gynt by Edvard Grieg, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Nicolò Foron; the traditional Chinese “Sun Quan the Emperor”; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer; “L’auzel ques sul bouyssou” (“Bird sitting in the Bush”) by Estienne Moulinié, sung by Claire Lefilliâtre with Le Poème Harmonique conducted by Vincent Dumestre.
Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read Paul Myers’ article “France launches recruitment for 10-month voluntary national military service”, which will help you with the answer.
You have until 9 February to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 14 February podcast. When you enter, be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Send your answers to:
english.service@rfi.fr
or
Susan Owensby
RFI – The Sound Kitchen
80, rue Camille Desmoulins
92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux
France
Click here to find out how you can win a special Sound Kitchen prize.
Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club.
Podcast: Reinventing retirement, saving a Paris cinema, counting the French
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An alternative to a retirement home in a mansion near Toulouse, where residents have invented a new way of living together and contributing to society. The David-and-Goliath story of an independent Parisian cinema that’s reopening after years of fighting eviction. And the story behind France’s annual census.
Scandals over abuse of the elderly in French care homes, combined with growing loneliness among pensioners, are forcing reflection on how – and where – people spend their later years. Three decades after founding the Utopia network of independent cinemas, Anne-Marie Faucon and Michel Malacarnet have turned their energy and experience towards imagining an alternative to traditional retirement homes. Their project, La Ménardiere, is an 18th-century mansion in the small town of Bérat, in south-west France. It operates as a shared-living collective, where residents, known as coopérateurs, are also shareholders. By taking control of their own destinies, they have created a model that also provides services and cultural activities for the surrounding community. Residents describe the approach as ageing together in a house that is “on the offensive”. (Listen @4′)
La Clef, an historic arthouse cinema in Paris, has reopened its doors after a group of residents, cinephiles and activists spent years protesting its closure. Ollia Horton met some of those who took part in a years-long occupation of the theatre that resulted in the activists raising enough money to buy the building from owners who wanted to sell the prime piece of real estate in the centre of the city. (Listen @21’48”)
As census-takers fan out around France to begin the annual counting of the population, we look at a process that started in the 14th century. During World War II the census was co-opted by Nazi occupiers to identify Jews, and while it has since stripped out questions relating to race and religion, it recently added controversial ones about parental origins. (Listen @17’10”)
Episode mixed by Cecile Pompeani.
Spotlight on France is a podcast from Radio France International. Find us on rfienglish.com, Apple podcasts (link here), Spotify (link here) or your favourite podcast app (pod.link/1573769878).
Syrian army offensive in Aleppo draws support from Turkey
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Turkey has backed a Syrian army offensive against the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in Aleppo, Syria’s second-largest city, despite a fragile ceasefire backed by the United States.
Aleppo has seen its worst fighting in years, as the Syrian army moved to oust the SDF from two large, mainly Kurdish neighbourhoods in the north of the city. The clashes began in late December and continued into January, forcing many civilians to flee.
The SDF controls a large swathe of northern and eastern Syria. The offensive comes as efforts to integrate the SDF into the Syrian army stalled.
“This is a warning. It is a kind of pressure on the SDF to come to a conclusion quickly, rather than to kick the can down the road with Damascus,” Aydin Selcen, a former senior Turkish diplomat who served in the region, told RFI.
Turkey’s backing
Ankara, which has recently reopened channels with Damascus after years of strained relations, strongly backs the offensive and has signalled its readiness to provide military support against the SDF.
“Turkey has the military advantage there, and I believe the SDF should take these warnings seriously,” Selcen said. He is now an analyst for the Turkish news portal Medyascope.
Turkey accuses the SDF of links to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, the PKK, which has fought an insurgency against the Turkish state for decades.
The PKK is designated a terrorist organisation by the United States and the European Union. Turkey is also pursuing a renewed peace initiative with the PKK and sees the integration of the SDF into the Syrian army as key to stabilising northern Syria.
US pushes Israel to accept Turkish role in Gaza stabilisation force
Stalled integration
In March last year, the SDF signed an agreement in Damascus to integrate with the Syrian army. The deal set out broad principles but left key questions unresolved.
“There was a discrepancy from the beginning in what the parties understood integration to mean,” said Sezin Oney, of the Turkish Politikyol news portal.
“In Turkey’s case, they mean integration in such a way that it melts into the Syrian army. But the SDF understands it as integrating while protecting its inner core and identity. Remaining as the SDF, but operating under the umbrella of the Syrian army.
“Unless one of the parties backs down and makes concessions, we are likely to see a bigger military operation.”
International stakes
On Thursday, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa held telephone talks with his French and Turkish counterparts on the security situation. The discussions focused on containing the fighting and preserving the ceasefire.
Despite its precarious position, the SDF retains influential supporters. Israel, an increasingly vocal critic of Turkey’s regional role, has expressed support for the group. Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar condemned Damascus’s operations in Aleppo.
The SDF remains a key partner of the United States Central Command in operations against the Islamic State group in Syria.
“The SDF lost a lot of troops, at least 10,000 fighters, in the fight against ISIS since 2014,” said Turkish international relations expert Soli Ozel.
“It’s a complicated picture. But from the American side, I do not yet see signs they would allow an attack on the SDF at this moment.”
According to Tom Barrack, the US ambassador to Turkey and Washington’s envoy on Syria, diplomatic efforts are under way to extend the Aleppo ceasefire and allow SDF fighters to withdraw from contested areas.
Turkey fears Ukraine conflict will spill over on its Black Sea shores
Pressure on Washington
The duration of US support for the SDF remains uncertain, especially after last year’s agreement between Washington and Damascus to step up cooperation against the Islamic State group.
The issue has taken on added significance following President Donald Trump’s meeting with Syrian President al-Sharaa in Washington.
Given President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s strong relationship with Trump, time may not be on the SDF’s side, Oney said.
“They want to have the northern part of Syria, at least, but also Syria more broadly, as their backyard,” she added. “Turkey is the most influential country in Damascus. They want the SDF to melt away into the new Syrian state and its army.”
Turkey could face domestic political fallout for targeting the SDF. Protests have erupted in the country’s predominantly Kurdish southeast, which borders Syria, in response to the clashes in Aleppo.
Any further military action against the SDF could jeopardise the fragile peace process with the PKK.
The Louvre in the news again
Issued on:
This week on The Sound Kitchen, it’s the answer to the question about the recently closed gallery in the Louvre Museum. You’ll hear about my recent trip to Copenhagen, where I met listener Hans Verner Lollike, there are your answers to the bonus question on “The Listeners Corner”, Ollia Horton’s “Happy Moment”, and it’s all topped off with a tasty musical dessert on Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan”. All that and the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.
World Radio Day is just around the corner, so it’s time for you to record your greetings for our annual World Radio Day program!
WRD is on 13 February; we’ll have our celebration the day after, on the 14 February show. The deadline for your recordings is Monday 2 February, which is not far off!
Try to keep your greeting to under a minute. You can record on your phone and send it to me as an attachment in an e-mail to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
Be sure to record your greeting from underneath a blanket. Then the sound will be truly radiophonic – I mean, you want everyone to understand you, right?
Don’t miss out on the fun. 2 February is just around the corner, so to your recorders!
Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!
Facebook: Be sure to send your photos for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write RFI English in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.
Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!
Our website “Le Français facile avec rfi” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.
Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”, and you’ll be counselled on the best-suited activities for your level according to your score.
Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service, told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it”. She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!
Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!
In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.
There’s Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, the International Report, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We also have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis.
Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our excellent staff of journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!
To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.
To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show.
Teachers take note! I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below.
Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in all your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!
This week’s quiz: On 22 November, I asked you a question about the world’s most visited museum – the Louvre here in Paris. The museum was back in the news, due to an architectural audit that turned up structural weaknesses in some of the beams in the building.
You were to re-read our article “Louvre Museum in Paris shuts gallery over structural safety fears”, and send in the answer to these two questions: What is the name of the gallery that has been closed, and what artworks are in that gallery?
The answer is: The Campana Gallery, which houses nine rooms dedicated to ancient Greek ceramics.
In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: What are your unique relationship rules?
Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!
The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Kashif Khalil from Faisalabad, Pakistan. Kashif is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations on your double win, Kashif.
Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Nuraiz Bin Zaman, a member of the RFI Amour Fan Club in Rajshahi, Bangladesh, and RFI Listeners Club member Nasyr Muhammad from Katsina State, Nigeria.
Last but not least, RFI English listeners Murshida Akhter Lata, the co-chairman of the Source of Knowledge Club in Naogaon, Bangladesh, and Miss Shuno, a member of the International Radio Fan and Youth Club in Khanewal, Pakistan.
Congratulations winners!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Barkley’s Bug” by David Grishman, performed by the David Grishman Quintet; Traditional Greek music produced by Visual Melodies; the “Rondo” from Frédéric Chopin’s Piano Concerto no. 1, performed by Krystian Zimmerman and the Polish Festival Orchestra; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer; “Happy” by Pharrell Williams, and “Guinnevere” by David Crosby, arranged and performed by Miles Davis and his ensemble.
Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr
This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-read Paul Myers’ article “Nigeria power past Mozambique into quarterfinals at Africa Cup of Nations”, which will help you with the answer.
You have until 2 February to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 7 February podcast. When you enter, be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.
Send your answers to:
english.service@rfi.fr
or
Susan Owensby
RFI – The Sound Kitchen
80, rue Camille Desmoulins
92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux
France
Click here to find out how you can win a special Sound Kitchen prize.
Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club.
Trump offers Turkey fresh hope for US fighter jets despite Israel’s opposition
Issued on:
After years of negotiations, the Turkish military may finally be close to acquiring American F-35 fighter jets. United States President Donald Trump has suggested a deal could be near, despite Israel warning that the sale would threaten its security amidst rising tensions with Turkey.
“We’re thinking about it very seriously,” Trump said when asked by a reporter about the sale of F-35 fighter jets to Turkey during a visit this week by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The sale has been blocked for years due to Turkey’s purchase of the Russian S-400 missile system. A recent Bloomberg report suggested Ankara may be prepared to return the missiles, though Turkish officials have denied this.
Political commentator Asli Aydintasbas, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, says that the strengthening relationship between Trump and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan means both sides are working to resolve the impasse.
“He [Trump] himself is working with Turkey through his very effective ambassador, Tom Barrack, to find a solution,” said Aydintasbas. “There will be stiff opposition from the Greek lobby, Israelis and other regional players. But we’ve seen Trump skirt such opposition when it came to the Saudi Arabia F-35 sale.”
Military edge
Israeli security experts warn that Turkey’s acquisition of F-35 jets poses a greater security risk to Israel than the Saudi deal due to the Turkish military’s expertise, which threatens to challenge Israel’s technological advantage.
Currently, Israel maintains a significant edge as the Turkish air force operates decade-old jets, a factor that is increasingly important amid rising regional tensions.
“There was definitely a concern in the spring that there might be a confrontation in the skies of Syria between Israel and Turkey,” said Gallia Lindenstrauss of the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.
Syria in crossfire as Turkish-Israeli rivalry heats up over Assad’s successors
She stresses the risk of confrontation has significantly diminished thanks to “de-confliction talks”, brokered by Azerbaijan. A Syria “hotline” now exists between Israel and Turkey to prevent what Lindenstrauss describes as “accidents between the Israeli Air Force and the Turkish Air Force”.
Yet the need for such measures underscores how strained ties are. “The fact that it exists, of course, does point to the fact that things are not necessarily calm,” Lindenstrauss acknowledged.
Provocative alliances
Israel’s conflict in Gaza has heightened tensions with Turkey. On New Year’s Day, hundreds of thousands protested in Istanbul in support of Palestinians.
Tensions escalated further as Israel increased military cooperation last month with Greece and Cyprus. Both Greece and Cyprus have unresolved territorial disputes with Turkey in the Mediterranean and Aegean Seas.
“Israelis are provoking especially Greeks and Greek Cypriots,” said Murat Aslan of Seta, a Turkish pro-government think tank. “The Israeli pilots are educating and training Greek pilots. They are operating [drones] across the Aegean Sea. And they sold many complex missile systems. So that means Israelis are provoking Greece just to challenge Turkey here in the Aegean Sea.”
In his New Year’s address, Erdogan said he was closely monitoring what he describes as threats and provocations against Turkey and Turkish Cypriots. Aslan predicts Ankara will not remain passive. “If there is a pattern in the west of Turkey that Greeks and Israelis are cooperating, for the sake of Turkish security interests, for sure there will be a reaction,” he warned.
Israel talks defence with Greece and Cyprus, as Turkey issues Netanyahu warrant
Greece, which is also acquiring the F-35, has joined Israel in opposing Turkey’s purchase of the jet, warning it would alter the balance of power.
While Trump has expressed support for the Turkish sale, analyst Aydintasbas notes the US president is learning the limitations of his power when it comes to Israel.
“Trump is going through what a lot of US presidents have experienced: frustration, and a question – ‘wait a minute, who’s the superpower here?’” she said. “Because of the power dynamic in the US-Israeli relationship, it sometimes does point to a situation in which Israelis, though the weaker side technically, end up having the upper hand because of their enormous influence in the public space.”
Aydintasbas predicts that, despite Trump’s friendship with and admiration for Erdogan, the US president will be unwilling to pay the political price of securing the Turkish jet sale. “This is an issue on which Trump is not willing to fight the US Congress… and essentially ignore the US law,” she said.
For the self-described master dealmaker, it may prove a deal too far.
Your 2026 Resolutions
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This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear our annual listener New Year’s Resolution show, co-hosted by my daughter Mathilde (as always!) There’s plenty of good music, too, to keep you in the holiday mood. Just click on the “Play” button above and enjoy!
Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday – here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz and bonus questions, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.
There’s no quiz this week – check in next week, 10 January, for the answer to the question about the gallery in the Louvre Museum that had to be closed.
Thanks to everyone who sent in their Resolutions – may you make good progress in keeping them! And many thanks to this week’s co-host, my daughter Mathilde Daguzan-Owensby, and for the contributions to the show from Olivia Morrow and Evan Coffey. And of course, hats off to the Magic Mixer Erwan Rome, who made this show sing!
Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Be Our Guest” by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman; the traditional “Auld Lang Syne” performed by the Glenn Miller Orchestra; “A House with Love in It” by Sid Lippman and Sylvia Dee, sung by Nat King Cole; “Winter Wonderland” by Felix Smith, performed by the Chet Baker Quartet; “Let it Snow” by Sammy Cahn, sung by Leon Redbone; “Sleigh Ride” by Leroy Anderson, performed by the Sam Bush Ensemble, and “We Wish you the Merriest” by Les Brown, sung by June Christie.
From the entire RFI English service, we wish you a Happy 2026!
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Madhya Pradesh: the Heart of beautiful India
From 20 to 22 September 2022, the IFTM trade show in Paris, connected thousands of tourism professionals across the world. Sheo Shekhar Shukla, director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, talked about the significance of sustainable tourism.
Madhya Pradesh is often referred to as the Heart of India. Located right in the middle of the country, the Indian region shows everything India has to offer through its abundant diversity. The IFTM trade show, which took place in Paris at the end of September, presented the perfect opportunity for travel enthusiasts to discover the region.
Sheo Shekhar Shukla, Managing Director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, sat down to explain his approach to sustainable tourism.
“Post-covid the whole world has known a shift in their approach when it comes to tourism. And all those discerning travelers want to have different kinds of experiences: something offbeat, something new, something which has not been explored before.”
Through its UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Shukla wants to showcase the deep history Madhya Pradesh has to offer.
“UNESCO is very actively supporting us and three of our sites are already World Heritage Sites. Sanchi is a very famous buddhist spiritual destination, Bhimbetka is a place where prehistoric rock shelters are still preserved, and Khajuraho is home to thousand year old temples with magnificent architecture.”
All in all, Shukla believes that there’s only one way forward for the industry: “Travelers must take sustainable tourism as a paradigm in order to take tourism to the next level.”
In partnership with Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board.
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Exploring Malaysia’s natural and cultural diversity
The IFTM trade show took place from 20 to 22 September 2022, in Paris, and gathered thousands of travel professionals from all over the world. In an interview, Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia discussed the importance of sustainable tourism in our fast-changing world.
Also known as the Land of the Beautiful Islands, Malaysia’s landscape and cultural diversity is almost unmatched on the planet. Those qualities were all put on display at the Malaysian stand during the IFTM trade show.
Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia, explained the appeal of the country as well as the importance of promoting sustainable tourism today: “Sustainable travel is a major trend now, with the changes that are happening post-covid. People want to get close to nature, to get close to people. So Malaysia being a multicultural and diverse [country] with a lot of natural environments, we felt that it’s a good thing for us to promote Malaysia.”
Malaysia has also gained fame in recent years, through its numerous UNESCO World Heritage Sites, which include Kinabalu Park and the Archaeological Heritage of the Lenggong Valley.
Green mobility has also become an integral part of tourism in Malaysia, with an increasing number of people using bikes to discover the country: “If you are a little more adventurous, we have the mountain back trails where you can cut across gazetted trails to see the natural attractions and the wildlife that we have in Malaysia,” says Hanif. “If you are not that adventurous, you’ll be looking for relaxing cycling. We also have countryside spots, where you can see all the scenery in a relaxing session.”
With more than 25,000 visitors at this IFTM trade show this year, Malaysia’s tourism board got to showcase the best the country and its people have to offer.
In partnership with Malaysia Tourism Promotion Board. For more information about Malaysia, click here.
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